Hi readers,
Hope whatever you are today makes you at ease and comfort to read my entries. I am so new to this, well my previous blog is like a part of my assignments so that is why they are all kinda sounds so factual info.
I am now 24 this year but not officially 24 because my birthday is on December. But something that I felt not too satisfying which I am still not settle and well on securing my career. I know it is normal to feel this way like all the motivational sayings and positive thoughts would be most probably comforting us the millennial to stay calm and it is okay to be not okay. I have this memories back in the day when I was maybe in primary school (age between 7-12) where I will always have this shivering feelings and worrying on what will I be in the future (read: adult). Like the thoughts of your childhood dream job, would I be a doctor?, would I be a scientist?, would I be a pilot?, would I be successful adult?. I know we all have that thought and I know too where maybe none of this reflect to us at all. Haha! Well, I am one of that person too. Well, you are not failing actually. It is okay to not become into your dream and admired job because believe in the fact we're too lazy too stupid to study back then! Hahahaha.
But you know at least be a good human. Restore the faith of humanity in yourself. I always say to myself, no matter how bad you are at your current job now, maybe sometime things doesn't work out well at our workplace always always at least be a good human to others. Be good to others as simple as that. No matter how bad your days are, be good to others. Restore that in yourself. At least maybe you help others to ease up their days, or maybe smile at people that passing by you, maybe in a traffic be tolerable driver even you know you gonna reach home late! You will never lose a dime to be good to others. Maybe randomly smile at a stray cat because he is fluffy and cute at the same time. Haha! My point is never lose yourself with you struggling whatever you are facing now and still try to be a good human. You can make a difference.
And never give up no matter what. As you might feel cliche, but it is true. Don't give up with yourself. As I know everyone of us have our own idols or people to look up to, think about this; what happen to that person if he/she has giving up when he/she is struggling in life. You are what you are today because of what you fight from the past. At least be proud of what you have become today. You have made it this far so keep going! And let's all be healthy and take care of ourselves. Peace out and Ciao!
We weren't necessarily put in the best position to make the best decisions. You can't be hard on yourself. For these were the cards that you were given so you have to understand that these, like... That's not who you are. You're trying to be the best you can be but that's all you can do. If you don't give it all you got, you're only cheating yourself Give it all you got. But if it ends up happening, It ends up happening. By Justin Bieber
Thursday, 26 September 2019
Monday, 2 January 2017
PROMOTIONAL STRATEGY
Objectives
•To explore the scope of retail promotion
•To study the elements of retail promotion: advertising, public relations, personal selling, and sales promotion
•To discuss the strategic aspects of retail promotion: objectives, budgeting, the mix of forms, implementing the mix, and reviewing and revising the plan
Elements of the Promotional Mix
•Advertising
—- Paid, nonpersonal communication transmitted through out-of-store mass media by an identified sponsor
—- Key aspects
•Paid form
•Non-personal presentation
•Out-of-store mass media
•Identified sponsor
Advantages
üAttracts a large audience
üGains pass along readership (for print)
üLow cost per contact
üMany alternatives available
üControl over message content; message can be standardized
üMessage study possible
üEditorial content surrounds ad
üSelf-service operations possible
•Public Relations
Communication that fosters a favorable image for the retailer
•Nonpersonal or personal
•Paid or nonpaid
•Sponsor-controlled or not
•Publicity – Nonpersonal form of public relations whereby messages are
transmitted by mass media. The time or space provided by the media is not
paid for, and there is no identified commercial sponsor
Advantages
üImage can be presented or enhanced
üMore credible source
üNo costs for message’s time or space
üMass audience addressed
üCarryover effects possible
üPeople pay more attention than to clearly identified ads
Disadvantages
ÒSome retailers do not believe in spending on image-related communication
ÒLittle control over publicity message
ÒMore suitable for short run
ÒCosts for PR staff, planning activities and events
•Personal Selling
- Oral communication with one or more prospective customers for the purpose of making a
sale
•Persuade customers to buy
•Stimulate sales of impulse items or products related to customers’ basic purchases
•Complete customer transactions
•Feed information back to company decision makers
•Provide proper levels of customer service
•Improve and maintain customer satisfaction
•Create awareness of items also marketed through the Web, mail, and telemarketing
Advantages
üMessage can be adapted
üMany ways to meet customer needs
üHigh attention span
üLess waste
üBetter response
üImmediate feedback
•Sales Promotion
Encompasses the paid communication activities other than advertising, public relations, and personal selling that stimulate consumer purchases and dealer effectiveness
Types of Sales Promotions
•Displays
•Contests
•Sweepstakes
•Coupons
•Frequent shopper programs
•Prizes
•Samples
•Demonstrations
•Referral gifts
Advantages
üEye-catching appeal
üDistinctive themes
üAdded customer value
üDraws customer traffic
üMaintains loyalty
üIncreases impulse purchases
üFun for customers
Disadvantages
ÒDifficult to terminate
ÒPossible damage to retailer’s image
ÒMore stress on frivolous selling points
ÒShort-term effects only
ÒUsed as a supplement
PRICING IN RETAILING
Objectives
•To describe the role of pricing in a retail strategy and to show that pricing decisions must be made in an integrated and adaptive manner
•To examine the impact that consumers, government, manufacturers, wholesalers and other suppliers, current/potential competitors have on pricing decisions
•To present a framework for developing a retail price strategy: objectives, broad policy, basic strategy, implementation, and adjustments
Pricing Options for Retailers
•Discount orientation
•At-the-market orientation
•Upscale orientation
Factors Affecting Retail Price Strategy
Price Elasticity of Demand
•The sensitivity of customers to price changes in terms of the quantities they will buy:
•Elastic – Small percentage changes in price lead to substantial percentage changes in the number of units bought.
•Inelastic – Large percentage changes in price lead to small percentage changes in the number of units bought.
Market Segments by Price Sensitivity
•Economic consumers
•Status-oriented consumers
•Assortment-oriented consumers
•Convenience-oriented consumers
Competition and Retail Pricing
•Market pricing – Retailers often price similarly to each other and have less control over price because consumers can easily shop around.
•Administered pricing – Firms seek to attract consumers on the basis of distinctive retailing mixes.
Pros and Cons of Everyday Low Pricing
Pros:
•Reduced advertising expense
•More predictable sales levels
•Fewer peaks and ebbs of sales distribution
Cons:
•Decreased excitement
•Potentially less store traffic due to specials
•Less “cherry-picking” by consumers who only purchase specials
STORE LAYOUT AND DESIGN
Boredom & the Store Environment
•Time Poverty
As consumers’ lives become increasingly time starved, customers are often entering retail stores with a negative feeling/emotion because they would rather be doing something else than shopping.
•Dissatisfaction with Shopping
Whether due to larger amounts of category management, cookie-cutter retailers, more time spent working, or changes in demographics.
Elements of the Store Environment
Store Planning
•“The better it is, the less you notice it as a customer”
Fundamentally concerned with the allocation of space and how it is used.
•Floor Plan
A schematic that shows where merchandise and customer service departments are located, how customers circulate through the store, and how much space is dedicated to each department.
Types of Space
•Back room
- Receiving areas for shipments & stockroom
•Office & other functional areas
- Break & training rooms, offices, and bathrooms
•Aisles, service areas, and other non-selling space
- Dressing rooms, service desks, etc.
•Walls
•Sales floor
Space Allocation Planning
•Requires the retailer to first analyze the profitability and productivity of various merchandise lines.
•On average 20% of a retailer’s merchandise is either obsolete or unwanted by the retailer’s customer base.
•Any productivity metric chosen must relate some performance variable (e.g., sales, GM, etc.) to the amount of space used in the store.
CUSTOMER SERVICES AND RETAIL SELLING
Learning Objectives
ØExplain why customer service is so important in retailing.
ØDescribe the various customer services that a retailer can offer.
ØExplain how a retailer should determine which services to offer.
Customer Service
ØHigh-quality service - A service that meets or exceeds customers’ expectations.
ØA way in which retailers provide the high-quality service expected and reduce customer defections is through relationship retailing programs.
ØRelationship retailing programs - The activities designed to attract, retain, and enhance long-term relationships with customers.
ØRetailers can develop long-term relationships with their customers by offering:
- financial benefits
- social benefits
Three Basic Tasks of Retailing
ØIt consists of all those activities performed by the retailer that influence:
- the ease with which a potential customer can shop or learnabout the store’s offering.
- the ease with which a transaction can be completed once the customer attempts to make a purchase.
- the customer’s satisfaction with the transaction.
ØTransient customer - An individual who is dissatisfied with the level of customer service offered at a store or stores and is seeking an alternative store with the level of customer service that he or she thinks is appropriate.
- Gives another store the opportunity to convert them
- What are some of the stores you know which actively work to avoid losing customers – and how do they do it?
ØPretransaction services - Provided to the customer prior to entering the store.
- Convenient hours – Examples of those which don’t?
- Information aids – such as?
ØTransaction services - Provided to customers when they are in the store shopping and transacting business.
- Credit
- Layaway
- Gift wrapping and packaging
- Check cashing
- Gift cards
Factors to Consider When Determining Customer Services to Offer
Retail Sales Management
ØTypes of retail selling
-Retailers that concentrate on the sale of shopping goods want their salespeople to both get and take orders.
- In lines of retail trade where predominantly convenience goods are sold, the role of the salesperson is that of an order taker.
- It is generally true that retailers with high margins and high levels of customer service place more emphasis on order getting; those with low margins and a low customer service policy tend to emphasize order taking.
ØSalesperson selection
= Hiring criteria
= Predictors
- Demographics
- Personality
- Knowledge and intelligence
- Experience
ØSalesperson training
ØRetailer’s policies
ØMerchandise
ØCustomer types
ØCustomer choice criteria
ØNo active product choice criteria
ØInadequate or vague choice criteria
ØChoice criteria in conflict
ØExplicit choice criteria
Evaluation of salespeople
CHAPTER 6
There are three types of location such as isolated store, planned
shopping center and unplanned business district.
There are advantages and disadvantages for having isolated stores.
For advantages, there are no direct competition, low rental costs, flexibility,
good for convenience stores and others .There is also disadvantages for having
isolated sore such as difficulty attracting customers, travel distance, high
advertising expenses and some others.
For planned shopping centers as well, there is advantages for is
well-rounded assortments, strong suburban population, one-stop and family
shopping and transportation access. For disadvantages, it was limited
flexibility, higher rental and stiff competition.
Pros of ownership versus leasing is freedom over concern with lease
renewal o though lease renewal negotiations with property owner, ability to
write off depreciation, possible capital appreciation from increased value of
real estate and control over property maintenance.
Cons of ownership versus leasing is difficulty in securing locations
in neighborhood, community and regional shopping centers, asses tied up in real
estate could be used for retail expansion, inventory, store renovation and real
estate activity can divert attention away from
retail activities.
Six terms of occupancy considerations were ownership versus leasing,
type of lease, operations and maintenance costs, taxes, zoning restrictions and
voluntary regulations.
As the conclusion, chapter 6 is similar with chapter 5 which is
focused on location and site selection. It will help retailers to emphasis site
selection as important thing to open a store.
Chapter 5: Site location
the objective of this chapter :
•To thoroughly examine the types of locations available to a retailer: isolated stores, unplanned business
districts, and planned shopping centers
•To note the decisions necessary in choosing a general retail location
•To describe the concept of one-hundred percent location
Three Types of Locations
- Isolated Store
- Planned Shopping Center
- Unplanned Business District
Isolated Stores
Advantages
•No direct competition
•Low rental costs
•Flexibility
•Good for convenience stores
•High visibility
•Adaptable facilities
•Easy parking
•Excellent for store that generates own traffic
Disadvantages
•Difficulty attracting customers
•Travel distance
•Lack of cumulative attraction for customers
•High advertising expenses
•No cost sharing for promotions
•Possibly restrictive zoning laws
Planned Shopping Centers
Advantages
•Well-rounded assortments
•Strong suburban population
•One-stop, family shopping
•Cost sharing of promotions
•Transportation access
•Pedestrian traffic
Disadvantages
•Limited flexibility
•Higher rent
•Restricted product offerings in lease
•Competition
•Requirements for association memberships
•Domination by anchor stores
•Impact of store closings on affinities
Types of Leases
- Straight
- Maintenance-Increase Recoupment
- Net
- Graduated
- Percentage
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